Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 717South Africa
Minister of Police v Henning (A31/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 717 (16 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 August 2023
Headnotes
with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police v Henning (A31/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 717 (16 August 2023)
Minister of Police v Henning (A31/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 717 (16 August 2023)
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sino date 16 August 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Case No: A31/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 16/08/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Appellant
And
BETSIE
HENNING
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BOTSI-THULARE AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal brought before the High Court of
Pretoria, Gauteng Division, with leave to appeal from the Magistrate
Court granted
against the whole judgement and order delivered by the
Honourable Magistrate M Khoele on 18 November 2021, in which the
respondent’s
claim for unlawful arrest and detention was upheld
with costs.
Parties
[2]
The appellant is the Minister of Police, a Minister in the Government
of the Republic of South
Africa, acting in his official capacity as
the Executive Authority responsible for policing, safety, and
security by the SAPS members
in the Republic of South Africa.
[3]
The respondent is Ms Betsie Henning, an adult female acting in her
legal capacity. The
parties will be referred to as the ‘Appellant’
and the ‘Respondent’ hereinafter.
Background
[4]
On 30 September 2017, Mr. Peter Henning (the respondent’s husband)
was given the alleged
stolen furniture by Mr. Stewart (the
complainant). On
19 October 2017,
the respondent was then contacted by her husband to remove the
furniture from Warmbath to Bela-Bela. The complainant
arranged the
truck and hired a trailer; he also provided a driver for the truck
and several other employees.
[5]
However, the complainant opened a case of theft at the police
station, based on the
allegations that the respondent and her husband
have stolen the property under false pretenses that they were selling
the farm in
Bela-Bela and the seller of the farm was known to them.
Only to find out that the respondent and her husband were allegedly
using
the furniture to create a home for themselves.
[6]
Based on the theft allegations, the respondent and her husband were
arrested and detained
on 20 February 2018. The respondent was
released on the 22 February 2018 due to the case being withdrawn.
[7]
The
court aquo
found that the arrest and detention was unlawful. Due to the unlawful
arrest and detention, the respondent claimed for damages against
the
appellant in the Magistrate Court for the District of Tshwane. The
court a quo
ordered
the appellant to pay R90 000 to the respondent. The claims
amounted to R200 000.00, and they included:
3.1.
Humiliation R50 000.00
3.2.
Contumelia
R25 000.00
3.4.
Discomfort R25 000.00
3.5.
Unlawful Arrest and detention, with malice R100 000.00
[8]
Dissatisfied with the Magistrate Court’s decision, appellant served
the learned Magistrate
with a notice to appeal, which was granted in
terms of rule 51 of the Magistrate Court Rules. The respondent is
also cross appealing
against the R90 000.00 award granted by the
Magistrate.
Issues for
determination
[9]
9.1. Whether the arrest was lawful in terms of
section 40(1)
(b) of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
?
In casu
[10]
The appellant submits that the arrest and detention was lawful. The
appellant bases the defence on section
40(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977(CPA). The basis of the defence is also
placed on the grounds that the arrest and
detention was lawful as the
police officers caused the respondent to appear before the Magistrate
Court on 22 February 2018, within,
48 hours of the arrest.
[11]
The appellant also submits that, the arresting police officer
(Ramalata) testified that, from the statements
of the complainants
(Mr and Mrs Stewart or the Stewarts), he inferred that the Stewarts
transported their furniture to Bela-Bela
willingly, because they were
under the impression that the property at Bela-Bela was between Mr
Stewart and the Seller in accordance
with the verbal agreement.
[12]
The appellant submits that the Stewarts did not transport the
furniture to Bela-Bela for the benefit of the
respondent and her
husband, and the respondent and her husband were not given possession
of the furniture, although they were under
the impression that they
were given the furniture. From the moment the Stewarts’ attorney
told them that the Stewarts want their
furniture back, then the
respondent and her husband stole the furniture.
[13]
The appellant further submits that the respondent’s version that
she was given the furniture could not possibly
be true, regarding the
fact that the respondent and her husband averred that they were given
the furniture by the Stewarts and who
kept insisting that their
furniture must be returned.
[14]
Regarding not contacting the respondent and her husband before going
to their home, the appellant submits
that Ramalata testified that he
heard Stewarts ‘side of the story that the respondent and her
husband stole the furniture. He further
heard that the Stewarts had
been trying without luck to get their furniture back, and therefore
he proceeded to go to Bela-Bela without
informing the respondent and
her husband as they may have left for KZN if he informed them that he
was coming to interview/investigate
them.
[15]
The appellant therefore submits that when Ramalata went to Bela-Bela
on the 20 February 2018, he went
to conduct the investigation by
speaking to the respondent first to solicit the information on their
side of the story. The subsequent
arrest should not negate that fact
and it is not a requirement for a police officer to contact a person
before interviewing them.
Respondent’s
submission
[16]
The respondent submits that the alleged stolen furniture was given to
them on 30 September 2017. Subsequent
to the above, she was contacted
by her husband to remove the furniture, which was pointed out by the
complainant. As soon as the
furniture being pointed out, the
furniture was removed as instructed by the complainant.
[17]
The respondent then further to that, and to their surprise, eight
police officers arrived at their premises
on 20 February 2018,
together with the complainant, his attorney, and his brother. All the
police officers were heavily armed. Her
husband was immediately
handcuffed. The respondent was informed that she was under arrest for
stealing furniture and the investigating
officer wanted to handcuff
her immediately.
[18]
The respondent contends that she informed the police officer that the
furniture was not stolen, it was
given to them. She wanted to explain
their position about the furniture, but she was told by the
investigating officer that she will
get her chance in court, and she
should not attempt to teach him his job. The respondent was given a
document to sign and was not
informed about bail.
[19]
The respondent submits that she was arrested on 20 February 2018 at
15:30 in Bela-Bela and released on
22 February 2018 at 13:30. The
respondent further contends that the conditions in the cell that she
was in were appalling, and she
could not sleep the first night as she
was scared. She was then taken to Hatfield Court, and she was
detained with six other prisoners.
From the Hartfield Court she was
taken to the Magistrate Court in Pretoria in the back of a police
van. She was detained in the police
cells with fifty to sixty other
detainees, the conditions of the cells were appalling, and she was
humiliated. She only saw her legal
representative in the evening of
21 February 2018.
Condonation
[20]
The appellant is applying for condonation in terms of rule 27(1) of
the Uniform Rules of Court. The rule
states that:
“
In
the absence of agreement between the parties, the court may upon
application on notice and on good cause shown, make an order
extending
or abridging any time prescribed by these Rules or by an
order of court or fixed by an order extending or abridging any time
for
doing any act or taking any step in connection with any
proceedings of any nature whatsoever upon such terms as to it seems
meet.”
[21]
The appellant submits that its grounds for late
filing was that, upon the delivery of the judgement by the
Magistrate, they obtained
instructions to appeal and requested the
Magistrate to provide reasons in terms of rule 51(8) of the
Magistrate Court. Unfortunately,
the appellant was not served the
reasons on time as the appellant’s candidate attorney was told that
the Magistrate has not yet
provided the notice.
[22]
The appellant has shown good cause for the late filing and since the
matter is of interest to both parties,
the condonation should be
granted.
Grounds for appeal and
analysis of the appeal
[23]
23.1. The court a quo ought to have found that the arrest and
detention was lawful since Ramalata established
reasonable suspicions
that the respondent committed a schedule 1 offence. The appellant
submits that the court
a quo
erred in finding that the arrest
and detention was unlawful.
23.2. The court
a quo
also erred in finding that the arresting officer should have been
aware from the statement given by the complainant that the furniture
was transported willingly, there was no theft.
23.3. The court
a quo
erred in finding that, the arresting officer (Ramalata) was aware of
that the respondent and her husband were under the impression
that
the furniture was given to them.
23.4. The court
a quo
erred in finding that Ramalata should have attempted to call the
respondent to hear her side of the story during the investigations.
23.5. The court
a quo
erred in finding that Ramalata relied on the complainant’s
statement and verbal agreements and failed to reach the respondent
telephonically.
The court
a quo
ought to have found out that
the complainant referred to the furniture as hers all the time.
23.6. The court
a quo
erred in finding that Ramalata maintained no suspicion of any offence
committed when he went to the respondent’s place for
investigations.
23.7. The
court a quo
erred in finding that Ramalata did not know his standing order and
that Ramalata was given instructions by his senior to trace the
suspects and the property and to further arrest the respondent and
her husband.
Law applicable to
the facts
Lawful arrest and
detention
[24]
In terms of section 40(1)(b) of Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977(CPA):
“
Arrest
by peace officer without warrant. —
(1)
A peace officer may without
warrant arrest any person—
(a)…Who
has committed an offence under schedule one
(b)
whom he reasonably suspects of having committed an offence referred
to in Schedule 1, other than the offence
of escaping from lawful
custody
(e)
who is found in possession of anything which the peace officer
reasonably suspects to be stolen property or property
dishonestly
obtained, and whom the peace officer reasonably suspects of having
committed an offence with respect to such thing;”
Reasonable
suspicion to arrest
[25]
The arrest without a warrant was wrongful and unlawful. There was no
reasonable suspicion that she committed
a Schedule 1 offence. The
arresting officer failed to explain the respondent ‘s
constitutional rights, and she was detained arbitrarily
without just
cause. In the court a quo it was clear that there was no offence of
theft committed because the complainants wilfully
relocated their
furniture to Bela-Bela.
If
the accused were refusing same, they should have followed the civil
route for recourse.
[26]
As was held in
Duncun
v Minister of Law and order
[1]
the jurisdictional facts for a section 40(1)(b) defence are that:
“
(i)
the arrestor must be a peace officer;
(ii)
the arrestor must entertain a suspicion;
(iii)
the suspicion must be that the suspect (the arrestee) committed an
offence referred to in Schedule 1;
and
(iv)
the suspicion must rest on reasonable grounds.”
[2]
[27]
The arrest must be based on a reasonable suspicion that confirms that
the arrestee has on
prima
facie
committed the said crime. It is in this way that the peace officer
may exercise his or her discretion and effect an arrest.
[3]
The
object of the arrest is to bring the accused person before the court,
not to punish them for an offence they did not commit.
[4]
[28]
The court in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
[5]
held that, while the peace officer may exercise its discretion on
reasonable suspicion, it is also stated that they should exercise
their discretion within the bounds of rationality. The court further
held that:
“
A
number of choices may be open to him, all of which may fall within
the range of rationality. The standard is not perfection, or
even the
optimum, judged from the vantage of hindsight and so long as the
discretion is exercised within this range, the standard
is not
breached. This does not tell one what factors a peace officer must
weigh up in exercising the discretion. An official who
has
discretionary powers must, as alluded to earlier, naturally exercise
them within the limits of the authorising statute read in
the light
of the Bill of Rights.”
[6]
[29]
In order to effect arrest without warrant, the police officer ought
to have fulfilled the precepts of
section 40(1)(b)(e) of the CPA, the
requirements are reasonable suspicion and the offence committed must
be under the ambit of schedule
1, the person must be found in
possession of the stolen properly.
Theft
[30]
Theft is defined as an unlawful and intentional appropriation of
another’s movable corporeal property,
or of such property belonging
to the thief in respect of which somebody else has a right of
possession or a special interest.
[7]
The elements of the offence are therefore the following:
[8]
(a)
actus reus
or
appropriation (or
contrectatio
);
(b)
property capable of being stolen;
(c)
unlawfulness; and
(d)
intention (or
animus furandi
)
[31]
The term theft was also defined in
R
v Sibiya
[9]
the
court held that:
“
The
more cumbersome yet famous definition of Gardiner and
Lansdown Criminal Law and Procedure 2 1652 reads as
follows: “Theft
is committed when a person, fraudulently and
without claim of right made in good faith takes or converts to his
use anything capable
of being stolen, with intent to deprive the
owner thereof of his ownership, or any person having any special
property or interest
therein of such property or interest.”
[10]
[32]
The
offence of theft is straightforward and unambiguous. The conduct
requires that the person should be in possession of movable property
that does not belong to them, and in which they have taken without
consent of the owner of the said property, under fraudulent,
intentional
and unlawful circumstances.
[33]
It is trite that the onus rests on a defendant to justify an arrest
after he has exercised the jurisdictional
discretion of an
arrest.
[11]
In
Mahlangu
and
another v Minister of
Police
,
[12]
the court held that:
“
The
prism through which liability for unlawful arrest and detention
should be considered is the constitutional right guaranteed
in section
12(1) not to be arbitrarily deprived of freedom
and security of the person. The right not to be deprived of freedom
arbitrarily
or without just cause applies to all persons in the
Republic. These rights, together with the
right
to human dignity, are fundamental rights entrenched in the Bill of
Rights. The State is required to respect, protect, promote
and fulfil
these rights, as well as all other fundamental rights. They are also
part of the founding values upon which the South
African
constitutional State is built
.”
[13]
[34]
An arrest deprives a person’s freedom of movement and security, it
invades a person’s liberty, and also
infringes the right to human
dignity. It is a prerequisite that the peace officer who avers that
he or she exercised jurisdictional
discretion and had a reasonable
suspicion that a crime was committed, bears the onus to justify the
arrest.
[35]
The arresting officer averred that he did the investigations and
traced the stolen items and the suspects,
but later contradicted his
statement and stated that he had an idea where the stolen goods were,
and that the complainant confirmed
the respondent’s address. The
police officer stated that he did not call the respondent and her
husband first as he was told that
by the complainant that the
respondent’s husband is from Kwa-Zulu Natal, and if the respondent
and her husband became aware that
the police were coming, they would
have moved back to KZN, somewhere where the police would not find
them.
Analysis of Unlawful
arrest
[36]
The court in
De
Klerk v Minister of Police,
[14]
defined an unlawful arrest as a:
“
A
delict comprises wrongful, culpable conduct by one person that
factually causes harm to another person that is not too remote.
When the harm in question is a violation of a personality interest
caused by intentional conduct, then the person who suffered the
harm
must institute the actio iniuriarum (action for
non-patrimonial damages) to claim compensation for the
non-patrimonial
harm suffered.”
[15]
[37]
The court in
Madingana
v Minister of Police
[16]
made an elaboration on damages to be awarded for unlawful arrest and
detention and held that:
“
The
context of an award of damages for unlawful arrest and detention must
always be informed by the constitutional right to freedom
and
security of the person. The balance must be struck between upholding
and enforcing such rights and ensuring that the award corresponds
accurately to the circumstances of the matter and does not amount to
the over-compensation.”
[17]
[38]
The court in
Abrahams
v Minister of Police
[18]
found that the relevant facts were trite, and the balance
was evident. This court made reference to an unreported case
of
Olgar
v Minister of Safety and Security
,
where Jones J observed that:
“
a
just award of damages should express the importance of the
constitutional right to individual freedom. At the same time, the
award
should properly consider the facts of the case, the personal
circumstances of the victim, and the nature extent, and degree of the
affront to his or her dignity and sense
”
[19]
(own emphasis)
[39]
In order to declare an arrest and
detention unlawful, the arrest must have deprived a person’s
liberty and personal interest. The
arrest must have been affected
without reasonable suspicion and the arrestee’s human dignity must
have been infringed in the process
and during the arrest.
[40]
The respondent was firstly arrested at her home in front of her
tenants and grandmother even though she
explained that the furniture
was not stolen. Secondly, she was transported by van to Pretoria
Hatfiled Police Station and driven
for more than 60km radius while
being handcuffed. Thirdly, she was taken to a police cell where there
were other detainees. Fourthly,
she was put in a cell where she could
not eat or sleep and given one slice of bread and she slept on the
floor. Lastly, the bathroom
was very dirty. This circumstance
indicates at face value that her constitutional rights were
infringed. The respondent suffered
humiliation and emotional
trauma throughout this process.
[41]
It is common cause that the respondent was arrested and detained by
the appellant without warrant of arrest
in terms of section 40(1) (b)
of the CPA.
[42]
Given the circumstances of the case, it is respectfully submitted
that the appellant does not have a
leg to stand on in this appeal.
The appellant did not form a reasonable suspicion based on
prima
facie
evidence for the commission of the crime of theft. However,
he initiated the arrest and detained the respondent. I find that the
arrest and detention have been unlawful, considering that, the crime
of ‘theft’ in which the respondent allegedly committed,
requires
that the movable property be removed intentionally and unlawfully
without the owner’s consent.
[43]
The property in question was removed with the
consent of the complainant, who even hired transportation to
remove
the property from Warmbath to Bela-Bela. The complainant was aware of
the whereabout of the property and where the respondent
is keeping
the property.
[44]
The arresting officer’s arrest was not based on reasonable
suspicion, because if this was the case,
he would have interviewed
the respondent to establish the facts from both parties and
established the truth before effecting the
arrest. Instead, the
arrest was premised on one side of the story, which is the side of
the complainant. In his testimony, he agreed
that he knew that the
furniture was voluntarily moved to Bela-Bela, yet he effected the
arrest and detention. If anything, the arrest
was premised on the
opinion that since the respondent’s husband is from KZN, they might
flee to KZN and hide where the police will
not find them moreover he
was on parole.
[45]
Based on the submission and evidence, the investigating officer
had formed a deliberate intention to arrest the appellant, and this
is borne out by the arrangement of eight heavily armed police
officers and additional back-up drivers, without giving reasons for
the visit sought to arrest the appellant and her husband. The
foregoing reflected an alleged reasonable suspicion for unlawful
arrest.
[46]
The respondent lodged a cross appeal, against the findings of the
learned Magistrate awarding R90 000.00
only for a period of
detention of 3 days. The ground for this appeal is that the learned
Magistrate did not award counsel fees on
a higher scale and within
the discretion of the taxing master.
[47]
As recorded earlier, the respondent had filed a cross appeal in
respect of the order of damages. As recorded
earlier, the respondent
has filed a cross appeal in respect of the award of damages, to the
extent that the award lies entirely within
the discretion of the
court and that her arrest and detention was unlawful.
[48]
In respect of the cross appeal it is our view, bearing in mind all
circumstances that the court of appeal
should not interfere with its
findings.
Order
[49]
The following order is made:
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
2.
The cross – appeal is dismissed with costs.
DM
BOTSI THULARE AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
I
agree and so ordered
C
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of hearing:
13
April 2023
Date
of judgment:
16
August 2023
For
the Appellant:
Adv
MN Kgare
Ms
RN Ntloko
Office
of State Attorney, Pretoria.
For
the Respondent:
JJ
Geldenhuys Attorneys
c/o
Barnard Attorneys
Office
310 Olivvetti House Pretoria
[1]
[1986]
2 All SA 241 (A).
[2]
Ibid
p248.
[3]
Ibid p249.
[4]
Macdonald
v Kumalo
1927
EDL 293
p 301.
[5]
[2010]
ZASCA 141
(SCA);
2011 (1) SACR 315
at para 39.
[6]
Ibid
at
para 39-40.
[7]
SV Hoctor, ‘The Law of South Africa (LAWSA) Criminal Law’ vol 11
Third edition (31 January 2023)
[8]
SV Hoctor ‘LAWSA’.
[9]
[1955] 4 All SA 312
(A)
;
1955 4 SA 247
(A).
[10]
Ibid
at para
347
[11]
I
bid
para 45.
[12]
[2021] ZACC 10 (CC).
[13]
Ibid
para 25.
[14]
[2019]
ZACC 32 (CC); 2020 (1) SACR 1 (CC); 2021 (4) SA 585 (CC).
[15]
Ibid
para 13.
[16]
[2023]
ZAECGHC 29.
[17]
Ibid on para 22.
[18]
2018]
JOL 40536 (ECP).
[19]
Ibid
para
20.
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